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OFA launched in January 2013 with high expectations that it would galvanize Obama’s 2012 campaign supporters to boost his legislative agenda in Congress. The group has lobbied on high-profile issues such as gun control, immigration and climate change, as well as the budget fight around October’s government shutdown.

The group released its fourth quarter and year-end fundraising figures Friday afternoon, though as a 501(c)4 organization it is not required to do so. It does not accept corporate donations or contributions from lobbyists.

Though OFA touts itself as a “grassroots funded operation” with “an average contribution of $37,” nearly one-fifth of its fourth-quarter fundraising, $1,090,000, came from just 17 donors.

OFA reported that 48 donors gave at least $5,000 during the fourth quarter. It also reported more than $20,000 in in-kind office space donated from the National Education Association.

Its largest fourth-quarter donors is New York philanthropist Amy Goldman Fowler, who gave $250,000. Other six-figure donors include Utah venture capitalist Ryan Smith, Chattanooga portrait studio owner Olan Mills II and Florida philanthropist Barbara Stiefel, all of whom gave $100,000. Democratic National Committee Treasurer Andrew Tobias gave OFA $50,000.

“As we approach the one year mark of our founding, OFA is extremely proud that our grassroots funded operation has an average contribution of $37,” spokeswoman Katie Hogan said. “We have raised $26.3 million from more than 421,000 individuals who are supporting our organizers and volunteers working to tip the scales back towards the American people and away from special interests in Washington.”

In addition to the 421,243 “grassroots donors,” OFA said 4.4 million of its supporters are “action takers,” meaning they have participated in an OFA event since the organization launched. OFA said its volunteers have hosted 10,697 “grassroots action events.”